Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 152, June 6, 1917 by Various
page 7 of 50 (14%)
page 7 of 50 (14%)
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long it lasts."--_Extract from Speech by the KAISER, delivered near
Arras._] I fear that Father's lost his nerve. As I peruse his last oration I seem to miss the good old _verve_, The tone of lofty exaltation, The swelling note of triumph (_Sieg_) That often carried half a league. The drum on whose resounding hide He brought to bear such weight and gristle Has now been scrapped and laid aside In favour of the penny whistle, On which he plays so very small You hardly hear the thing at all. No more we mark the clarion shout-- "Go where the winds of victory whirl you!" His eagle organ, petering out, Whines like a sick and muted curlew; A plaintive dirge supplants the paean That used to rock the empyrean. Poor Father must have changed a lot. He had a habit (now he's shed it) Of patronising "_Unser Gott_," And going shares in all the credit; To-day he wears a humbler air, And leaves to Heaven the whole affair. |
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